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Dive into the research topics where Stéphane Genin is active.

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Featured researches published by Stéphane Genin.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Physical interaction between RRS1-R, a protein conferring resistance to bacterial wilt, and PopP2, a type III effector targeted to the plant nucleus

Laurent Deslandes; Jocelyne Olivier; Nemo Peeters; Dong Xin Feng; Manirath Khounlotham; Christian Boucher; Imre E. Somssich; Stéphane Genin; Yves Marco

RRS1-R confers broad-spectrum resistance to several strains of the causal agent of bacterial wilt, Ralstonia solanacearum. Although genetically defined as recessive, this R gene encodes a protein whose structure combines the TIR-NBS-LRR domains found in several R proteins and a WRKY motif characteristic of some plant transcriptional factors and behaves as a dominant gene in transgenic susceptible plants. Here we show that PopP2, a R. solanacearum type III effector, which belongs to the YopJ/AvrRxv protein family, is the avirulence protein recognized by RRS1-R. Furthermore, an interaction between PopP2 and both RRS1-R and RRS1-S, present in the resistant Nd-1 and susceptible Col-5 Arabidopsis thaliana ecotypes, respectively, was detected by using the yeast split-ubiquitin two-hybrid system. This interaction, which required the full-length R protein, was not observed between the RRS1 proteins and PopP1, another member of the YopJ/AvrRxv family present in strain GMI1000 and that confers avirulence in Petunia. We further demonstrate that both the Avr protein and the RRS1 proteins colocalize in the nucleus and that the nuclear localization of the RRS1 proteins are dependent on the presence of PopP2.


Molecular Microbiology | 1995

The hrp gene locus of Pseudomonas solanacearum, which controls the production of a type III secretion system, encodes eight proteins related to components of the bacterial flagellar biogenesis complex

Frédérique Van Gijsegem; Clare Gough; Claudine Zischek; Eric Niqueux; Matthieu Arlat; Stéphane Genin; Patrick Barberis; Sylvie German; Philippe Castello; Christian Boucher

Five transcription units of the Pseudomonas solanacearum hrp gene cluster are required for the secretion of the HR‐inducing PopA1 protein. The nucleotide sequences of two of these, units 1 and 3, have been reported. Here, we present the nucleotide sequence of the three other transcription units, units 2, 4 and 7, which are together predicted to code for 15 hrp genes. This brings the total number of Hrp proteins encoded by these five transcription units to 20, including HrpB, the positive regulatory protein, and HpaP, which is apparently not required for plant interactions., Among the 18 other proteins, eight belong to protein families regrouping proteins involved in type III secretion pathways in animal and plant bacterial pathogens and in flagellum biogenesis, while two are related solely to proteins involved in secretion systems. For the various proteins found to be related to P. solanacearum Hrp proteins, those in plant‐pathogenic bacteria include proteins encoded by hrp genes. For Hrp‐related proteins of animal pathogens, those encoded by the spa and mxi genes of Shigella flexneri and of Salmonella typhimurium and by the ysc genes of Yersinia are involved in type III secretion pathways. Proteins involved in flagellum biogenesis, which are related to Hrp proteins of P. solanacearum, include proteins encoded by fli and fli genes of S. typhimurium, Bacillus subtils and Escherichia coli and by mop genes of Erwinia carotovora. P. solanacearum Hrp proteins were also found to be related to proteins of Rhizobium fredii involved in nodulation specificity.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1994

A superfamily of proteins involved in different secretion pathways in gram-negative bacteria: modular structure and specificity of the N-terminal domain

Stéphane Genin; Christian Boucher

The family of PulD proteins, which has been characterized in a wide variety of microorganisms, comprises several membrane-associated proteins essential for the transport of macromolecules across bacterial membranes. These proteins are involved in the transport of complex structures (such as phage particles, DNA) or various proteins (such as extracellular enzymes and pathogenicity determinants). Amino acid sequence analysis revealed a possible modular organisation of proteins of this superfamily, with highly conserved C-terminal domains and dissimilar N-terminal domains. In the C-terminal domain, four highly conserved regions have been found, one of them containing a remarkable common motif: (V, I)PXL(S, G)XIPXXGXLF. Structural comparisons between the N-terminal domains indicate that proteins of this superfamily can be divided into at least two subgroups, probably reflecting the existence of distinct secretion mechanisms. This implies that members of the superfamily of PulD-related proteins are independently involved in (1) the general secretory pathway, (2) a new signal-peptide-independent secretion pathway found in several bacterial pathogens, and possibly in (3) the translocation of bacteriophage particles through the bacterial cell envelope.


Trends in Microbiology | 1993

Conservation of secretion pathways for pathogenicity determinants of plant and animal bacteria

Frédérique Van Gijsegem; Stéphane Genin; Christian Boucher

Extracellular proteins of plant and animal bacteria are important in virulence. Many of these are secreted through the type I sec-independent and the type II sec-dependent pathways. Recently, a third distinct pathway, involved in secretion of Yops, has been discovered in Yersinia. This pathway has homology with pathways in plant pathogenic bacteria that are putatively involved in the secretion of proteins active on plant cells, such as harpin and possibly some avr gene products


Molecular Microbiology | 2004

Inventory and functional analysis of the large Hrp regulon in Ralstonia solanacearum: identification of novel effector proteins translocated to plant host cells through the type III secretion system

Sébastien Cunnac; Alessandra Occhialini; Patrick Barberis; Christian Boucher; Stéphane Genin

The ability of Ralstonia solanacearum strain GMI1000 to cause disease on a wide range of host plants (including most Solanaceae and Arabidopsis thaliana) depends on genes activated by the regulatory gene hrpB. HrpB controls the expression of the type III secretion system (TTSS) and pathogenicity effectors transiting through this pathway. In order to establish the complete repertoire of TTSS‐dependent effectors belonging to the Hrp regulon and to start their functional analysis, we developed a rapid method for insertional mutagenesis, which was used to monitor the expression of 71 candidate genes and disrupt 56 of them. This analysis yielded a total of 48 novel hrpB‐regulated genes. Using the Bordetella pertussis calmodulin‐dependent adenylate cyclase reporter fusion system, we provide direct biochemical evidence that five R. solanacearum effector proteins are translocated into plant host cells through the TTSS. Among these novel TTSS effectors, RipA and RipG both belong to multigenic families, RipG defining a novel class of leucine‐rich‐repeats harbouring proteins. The members of these multigenic families are differentially regulated, being composed of genes expressed in either an hrpB‐dependent or an hrpB‐independent manner. Pathogenicity assays of the 56 mutant strains on two host plants indicate that, with two exceptions, mutations in individual effectors have no effect on virulence, a probable consequence of genetic and functional redundancy. This large repertoire of HrpB‐regulated genes, which comprises > 20 probable TTSS effector genes with no counterparts in other bacterial species, represents an important step towards a full‐genome understanding of R. solanacearum virulence.


Molecular Microbiology | 1992

Evidence that the hrpB gene encodes a positive regulator of pathogenicity genes from Pseudomonas solanacearum

Stéphane Genin; Clare Gough; Claudine Zischek; Christian Boucher

The hrp gene cluster of Pseudomonas solanacearum GMI1000 strain encodes functions that are essential for pathogenicity on tomato and for the elicitation of the hypersensitive response on tobacco. In this study, we present the nucleotide sequence of one of the hrp genes (hrpB) located at the left‐hand end of the cluster and we show that hrpB encodes a positive regulator controlling the expression of hrp genes. hrpB has a coding capacity for a 477‐amino‐acid polypeptide, which shows significant similarity to several prokaryotic transcriptional activators including the AraC protein of Escherichia coli, the XylS protein of Pseudomonas putida and the VirF protein of Yersinia enterocolitica. The predicted hrpB gene product belongs to a family of bacterial regulators different from the previously described HrpS protein of the hrp gene cluster of Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola. Genetic evidence demonstrates that the hrpB gene product acts as a positive regulator of the expression in minimal medium of all but one of the putative transcription units of the hrp gene cluster and also controls the expression of genes located outside this cluster. We also show in this paper that the transcription of hrpB is induced in minimal medium and is partly autoregulated.


The EMBO Journal | 2000

A bacterial sensor of plant cell contact controls the transcriptional induction of Ralstonia solanacearum pathogenicity genes

Didier Aldon; Belen Brito; Christian Boucher; Stéphane Genin

The hrp genes of the plant pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum are key pathogenicity determinants; they encode a type III protein secretion machinery involved in the secretion of mediators of the bacterium–plant interaction. These hrp genes are under the genetic control of the hrpB regulatory gene, expression of which is induced when bacteria are co‐cultivated with plant cell suspensions. In this study, we used hrp–gfp transcriptional fusions to demonstrate that the expression of the hrpB and type III secretion genes is specifically induced in response to the bacterium–plant cell contact. This contact‐dependent induction of hrpB gene expression requires the outer membrane protein PrhA, but not a functional type III secretion apparatus. Genetic evidence indicates that PrhA constitutes the first example of a bacterial receptor for a non‐diffusible signal present in the plant cell wall and which triggers the transcriptional activation of bacterial virulence genes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Ralstonia solanacearum requires F-box-like domain-containing type III effectors to promote disease on several host plants

Aurélie Angot; Nemo Peeters; Esther Lechner; Fabienne Vailleau; Catherine Baud; Laurent Gentzbittel; Elodie Sartorel; Pascal Genschik; Christian Boucher; Stéphane Genin

The phytopathogenic bacterium Ralstonia solanacearum encodes a family of seven type III secretion system (T3SS) effectors that contain both a leucine-rich repeat and an F-box domain. This structure is reminiscent of a class of typical eukaryotic proteins called F-box proteins. The latter, together with Skp1 and Cullin1 subunits, constitute the SCF-type E3 ubiquitin ligase complex and control specific protein ubiquitinylation. In the eukaryotic cell, depending on the nature of the polyubiquitin chain, the ubiquitin-tagged proteins either see their properties modified or are doomed for degradation by the 26S proteasome. This pathway is essential to many developmental processes in plants, ranging from hormone signaling and flower development to stress responses. Here, we show that these previously undescribed T3SS effectors are putative bacterial F-box proteins capable of interacting with a subset of the 19 different Arabidopsis Skp1-like proteins like bona fide Arabidopsis F-box proteins. A R. solanacearum strain in which all of the seven GALA effector genes have been deleted or mutated was no longer pathogenic on Arabidopsis and less virulent on tomato. Furthermore, we found that GALA7 is a host-specificity factor, required for disease on Medicago truncatula plants. Our results indicate that the GALA T3SS effectors are essential to R. solanacearum to control disease. Because the F-box domain is essential to the virulence function of GALA7, we hypothesize that these effectors act by hijacking their host SCF-type E3 ubiquitin ligases to interfere with their host ubiquitin/proteasome pathway to promote disease.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

Ralstonia solanacearum requires type 4 pili to adhere to multiple surfaces and for natural transformation and virulence

Yaowei Kang; Huanli Liu; Stéphane Genin; Mark A. Schell; Timothy P. Denny

As reported previously for Ralstonia solanacearum strain GMI1000, wild‐type strains AW1 and K60 were shown to produce Hrp pili. AW1 and K60 mutants lacking Hrp pili still exhibited twitching motility, which requires type 4 pili (Tfp), and electron microscopy revealed that they still made flexuous polar pili. Twitching‐positive cells had an extracellular 17 kDa protein that was associated with piliation, and an internal 43‐amino‐acid sequence of this protein was typical of type 4 pilins. This amino acid sequence is encoded by an open reading frame, designated pilA, in the genomic sequence of GMI1000. PilA is 46% identical to a Pseudomonas aeruginosa type 4 pilin over its entire length and has all the conserved residues and motifs characteristic of type 4 group A pilins. pilA mutants did not make the 17 kDa PilA protein and did not exhibit twitching motility. When compared with its parent, an AW1 pilA mutant was reduced in virulence on tomato plants and in autoaggregation and biofilm formation in broth culture. Unlike AW1, a pilA mutant did not exhibit polar attachment to tobacco suspension culture cells or to tomato roots; it was also not naturally competent for transformation. We reported previously that twitching motility ceases in maturing AW1 colonies and that inactivation of PhcA, a global transcriptional regulator, results in colonies that continue to exhibit twitching motility. Similarly, in broth culture, expression of a pilA::lacZ fusion in AW1 decreased 10‐fold at high cell density, but expression remained high in a phcA mutant. In addition, pilA::lacZ expression was positively regulated 10‐fold by PehR, a response regulator that is known to be repressed by PhcA. This signal cascade is sufficient to explain why pilA expression, and thus twitching motility, decreases at high cell densities.


PLOS Pathogens | 2006

Integrated Regulation of the Type III Secretion System and Other Virulence Determinants in Ralstonia solanacearum

Marc Valls; Stéphane Genin; Christian Boucher

In many plant and animal bacterial pathogens, the Type III secretion system (TTSS) that directly translocates effector proteins into the eukaryotic host cells is essential for the development of disease. In all species studied, the transcription of the TTSS and most of its effector substrates is tightly regulated by a succession of consecutively activated regulators. However, the whole genetic programme driven by these regulatory cascades is still unknown, especially in bacterial plant pathogens. Here, we have characterised the programme triggered by HrpG, a host-responsive regulator of the TTSS activation cascade in the plant pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum. We show through genome-wide expression analysis that, in addition to the TTSS, HrpG controls the expression of a previously undescribed TTSS-independent pathway that includes a number of other virulence determinants and genes likely involved in adaptation to life in the host. Functional studies revealed that this second pathway co-ordinates the bacterial production of plant cell wall-degrading enzymes, exopolysaccharide, and the phytohormones ethylene and auxin. We provide experimental evidence that these activities contribute to pathogenicity. We also show that the ethylene produced by R. solanacearum is able to modulate the expression of host genes and can therefore interfere with the signalling of plant defence responses. These results provide a new, integrated view of plant bacterial pathogenicity, where a common regulator activates synchronously upon infection the TTSS, other virulence determinants and a number of adaptive functions, which act co-operatively to cause disease.

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Christian Boucher

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Nemo Peeters

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Patrick Barberis

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fabien Lonjon

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Alice Guidot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Clare Gough

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Anne-Claire Cazalé

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Matthieu Arlat

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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